tv Keiser Report RT October 14, 2021 3:30pm-4:00pm EDT
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kaiser report, i've had a little bit of a bordello twist here, some flowers, some red lights behind us, slightly fantastic. i feel the warmth, kindly embrace of your rhetoric. the warm cuddly embrace is really needed for this winter energy crisis grips the world. lebanon runs out of power. india warns of coal fired plants could go dark, and just 3 days. blackouts, china, and gas prices sore in europe, lights go out lebanon as biggest to power stations shut, due to fuel shortage, energy network, unlikely to be restored for several days. according to officials, meanwhile, some chinese provinces are rationing electricity amid crisis. europeans are paying exorbitant prices for liquefied natural gas. and india is low on coal and it came as the world leaders prepared to me in glasgow for they cop $26.00 climate change accord. right? so what's happening in love and what's happening in india is a failure, free market competition. so free market competition has been with us for 100000
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years or longer, 400000 years. it's the what defines humanity. it will makes humans different than other species of animals on planet earth. and over the past 40 years, we've seen replacement our free market competition with the command and control of central bankers who have destroyed the value of society, both in the money, but also any economists additional value. they destroyed religion. that's just right education. they've destroyed medicine, and now we have complete chaotic, free for all, and countries and economies are going to start to shut down, closed down, and the ceiling. chaos could have been avoided. have they watched the cars report and heated our words? right. and the thing is yes, the winter of our discontent, me glorious. bye bye glory summer. you know, the fact is that we may see better times because of a harder money coming, right. bitcoin is on the horizon and it's kind of exposed these shenanigans since
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2008 and that's when the coin was 1st birth and the white paper. so you know, a lot of this stuff is just being made obvious on stage as these player struct. and fret, the our, you know, in interventions and trying to control things. and, you know, with these energy crisis gripping the world. part of it's all due to the reaction right to the pandemic. you know the c word which you can't mention because will be censored for it. but the fact is that you know that the consequences of all the money printing the consequences of locking down and having a shortage of workers. this is causing the knock on effect of the shortage of energy. and on top of that, you had all the sanctions and the weaponized settlement layer grid that was already in place and getting worse and worse since 2008, 200912009, i believe was
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a 1st time for example, that obama took around off the swift system. so these are all the consequences, the ripple effect of the, you know, the crises emerging all over the place where it presents trickle out of that that, that chaos at the center. yes. the entropy, all, all is in force as physical dimensions because it's the, one of the overriding rules of the universe is that things tend to degrade and chronically into atomization and particles ation. and it requires great effort by society and this institution to fight entropy. and to create societal cohesion. but unfortunately over the past 40 years during the central banker, the incredible corruption that we've seen has now utterly destroyed all society. i
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think margaret thatcher was probably correct what you said there is no society and we, we really have not anymore. so we're being replaced now. the big point standard went, arises from the big one standard in terms of what we will recognize and call civilization. that's what you have to be determined. we really don't know yet. america is choking under and everything shortage. that's the story from the atlantic and it catalogues the same thing, all the shortages across the entire economy and it blames the locked downs but also all the money printing as a result of the lock downs i. when you're locked down, when you're not producing goods and services, you have to create value with all that money printing. otherwise, everybody's just getting more money to chase the same available goods and services which were shrinking and shrinking and shrinking, which as everybody locked down and locked home and everybody around the world got free money. so we're facing the same goods. i'm going to show you this email i received part of the email that i received from family farm. i think it was an
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indiana and we had ordered some meet from them early on in the pandemic a year and a half ago. and this is that they, they talk about the inflation hitting them hard as a family farm. real family farm, not one of these factory farm, you know, big conglomerates how inflation is impacting our farm. read the email and they mentioned increases for non g m o green, the non g m a feed for our pigs and chickens represents our largest input costs for raising these animals. and this year we've absorbed price spikes as high as 20 percent above expected cost. and the cost spikes on packaging materials such as boxes have risen over 35 percent since a year ago. and we've absorbed multiple price spikes on dry ice and insulation materials due to labor shortages. the costs delivery has also increased throughout the year. right. ok, just to review the inflationary pressures have been building for decades. but they were not always obvious to the middle class, because as wealth was transferred from the bottom to the top through the
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machinations of the crop, central banks, the lower classes and the poor people were increasingly marginalized and victimized and vilified famously by hillary clinton, who call them the deplorable right? those are the victims of, of jamie diamond in the central banks. but now if the inflation is not creeping into the middle class. and so now it's a crisis suddenly because the person who might be ordering from a private farm, privately grass fed beef tender lines and you know, butter may from cows getting a daily massage. ok, those prices are now going up. and now those people who are in the media class in the legal class, in the doctor class, right, those people are like walking, oh my god there's what's going on here. it's inflation. so that not much to like to stop. it's well, it's going much higher food prices will very quickly now double and triple. so now
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is the interview. discontent made gloria farmer by you know, the future that the american dream really like. ok times might be horrible, but things are going to get better. so there's a notion that we have transitory inflation. things are going to get better. don't worry. there's also the children, the future, like the future dial prospects. we were told, for example, that, ok, we don't need dirty manufacturing jobs here. that's low value added. we're going to send those overseas and we service the sector. you can work from home, you don't even need to do anything. you just need to think and where uniquely in a shining city on a hill sort of country. and we can just think better. well, services also in the latest trade deficit, we have a services deficit. so that's also declining. but so in terms of the inflation costs and that, that reaction the locked downs and all of this stuff with that we've done without
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thought. we're not even allowed to have a conversation about this. we're not allowed to discuss the c word anywhere in the areas where we meet the modern day beer hall. the modern day coffee shop is the internet is social media is places like twitter. so to read the story for coming out of the u. s. in terms of school children are just starting to return after 18 months of no education. right. for some reason, we mentioned that earlier that i thought like shirley, this is going to have some sort of consequence, particularly on the most vulnerable, most important period when they're before they go to middle school. so before you know, up until 5th grade. well, when 4th graders can't read, phoenix, school battles, pandemic learning loss. students return to in person learning with diminished reading skills, putting them to grade levels behind. so they highlight this class and outside of phoenix and a working class area i,
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their parents were all frontline workers. they were construction workers. they were, you know, sewage and electricians, and drivers and stuff like that. so they always had to work. went home to work from home with a children who have to do online classes. so they have 4th graders. he's a 9 year old. right. who couldn't spell rob r u b. they couldn't, he was spell that they and they had to work through them. how to, how to spell that. so this is the level of reading comprehension, which was very shocking. we'll go into some of the details in particular that it was the front line workers, children's e, black and brown children who were hit, the hardest way harder. so we'll see that data to yeah, it's remarkably cruel when society abandons its children. i think that's a hallmark of a certain nihilism that we see creeping in to our american society and other societies and economies around the world. they're literally throwing children into
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the volcano to try to get the money, printing gods to print more money. and obviously that's not a healthy situation. but it is the state of affairs now. well, we have a neo liberal sort of system which has externalized causes cost for years, decades now 50 years. exactly. since the us dollar turn 50, as it is all throughout the global system and august, the 1971. it started. well, we've had been able to externalize those costs and keep on rolling over the debt all the way down to 0 percent interest rates. and we've able been able to hide everything. so now we're at this point where we're not allowed to discuss the consequences. we're in society that no longer address costs. so is this a cost that we should consider? should we concern ourselves that these $8.00, you know, these is the 789 year olds are going without any education and out importantly, without the socialization either. so do we need to concern ourselves with this?
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and they point out that the math scores, for example, math achievement dropped by 12 percentile points before pandemic to now and 6 percentiles for the reading class. in terms of, you know, that notion of the, that what you see in the media here on the united states, blue checked media, the social justice, worry and, and that we need to do something. and we're all white supremacists, look at the results of their actual actions. they've decided, but the drop in reading a month scores among black and latino, 4th grade students was on average double that of white and asian american students . and at the same time, among 4th graders, a critical juncture and education students from high poverty schools, experienced 3 times as much learning loss in reading compared with those and enrolled and low poverty schools. right? well, a lot of what's tons, school now is brand that differentiation, so that kids now the difference between different, branded consumer products, if they can't really disturb, distinguish the difference, then it's all commodity driven consumer products. and none of these big
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corporations are going to be able to have a premium on their products, so they're all going to go bankrupt. so they're just killing the seed corn. right? i mean, you've been training these kids to become addicted to. you're drunk for years. then so stupid, now you can even get them addicted to your junk anymore. american, you, you cuckoo. all right, we're going to take a break and when we come back, much more coming your way with the surgeons tactile perception as well as his or her. i saw it helps a lot because you need to make sure you don't break this right well, placing the switches and robotic hands can't do that now. and i believe not ever, you can write so close to the machine, but you cannot give it a human tactile perception in beautiful yellow dawson with on what it says i middle august will still in duncan, but again, it's like a noise to ye. beautiful. i
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fresh, lucy still don't love. would you the god that would look as if that's something you would bring it in with a cool guy. that's nice. cool. and never he ever properties. what's the, what's in the baton with affiliate? what that's for the what like you o'clock with night seems often when he's got the west when lockwood new. so we'll do so what's the booklet keeps them from the, from the news, a kind of what the stuff that the same i'm giving you this global olga slave to bring me as i will continue to one wonderful said little squiggly ah, uncle, which if it, but our one, why do you think that us in my mouth on i besides that we still live
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welcome back to the kaiser report on max kaiser time, not to go to mark mas. she's got a podcast that's now airing on. i heart radio. sounds good. hey, mark, welcome. yeah, thanks so much man. i'm so excited to hear with you today. all right, now mark, you've got the, the gift of the clairvoyant in 2020. when you predicted we would say an energy crisis. that prediction seems to be coming through what's going on. yeah, unfortunately it is coming true. it's not a prediction. i would like to see him come true. but you know, basically what happened is of september of last year 2020. i was down in mexico. i was living in california is down in mexico and a little tiny town surfing one paved road and the electricity worked fine. but while i, while i was gone in california, they kept having these rolling blackouts. and so i got home and i started looking at it and i made a video prediction. and i said, what's happening in california is coming for the country and the rest of the world . and the reason why i was able to predict that, not because i had a crystal ball, it's because it's happening over policy. so in california specifically,
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they want to be the model for the rest of the united states. and so they have set these very aggressive standards of moving away from fossil fuels and moving in to clean renewables and stay at these crazy mandates. and they literally started shutting down the power plants energy plans. they shut down the natural gas plants, they shut down 2 out of the 3 nuclear reactors. and, you know, we'll, we'll move to renewables. of course, we don't have those yet, but, you know, eventually we'll, in the meantime, we'll just borrow from our neighbors of arizona and nevada. but of course, when california needs a lot of electricity, so do they, there's none to go around. and so the blackouts are being caused by policy, and i knew that those policies should be going to the rest of the world, which they are, which is why i predicted in, which is exactly why we're having an energy crisis all over the world today. wow, that sounds crazy. now politicians often vote for what they deemed to be a good idea without really thinking through the economics. and this is a,
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a recurring problem. but when it comes to energy and economic illiteracy is so great that you accidentally turn off the state's energy. but what you're saying is that this is going on all over the world is literally going all over the world. i mean, we're seen all throughout europe. big time problems, natural gas, electricity. so natural gas is in short supply. the prices are up a 100 percent. they're worried that you know, winter's coming in in europe and it gets very cold, him some parts and people might not have enough natural gas to even heat their homes, which could be a very big problem. and then, you know, because of these, these are complex system. what happened is they, you know, they try to effect one thing and they don't take into account all the other problem . so when natural gas gets in shortage, and then of course prices spike from that, within the natural gas that's used to create electricity, the price to start spiking, the companies go out of business. and what's interesting is they had just met. the you in is, is having a big meeting coming up, but they just did a pre median, i think, a week or 2 ago and
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a good old boris from the u. k. i said that we want to make the u. k. the example, that's what he said. and so i thought, wow, how rich that they want to be the example because the u. k is literally in the worse shape out of all they're taking kind of a plane out of a california which is less natural gas. and then we'll borrow from france, but they didn't get as much from france as they were hoping to. they've also moved a lot to quote unquote renewables or way. maybe we'll call them unreliable, which is wind. and oh, shoot. we kind of had a quick on how it lo, windier. we didn't furnace prison of wind. now they're sitting on massive amounts of natural gas reserves. they could get it out of the ground if they want to, but they don't. and so they're literally causing this problems to themselves, right? well the, a k, a certainly setting themselves up to be an example, an example of stupidity. and i think everyone now knows it, but let's move on to a country that is setting
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a new example for excellence and foresight. and that would be el salvador, their mining big coin with volcano energy, which is virtually free. i columbia is proposing to mind big coin using waterfall energy. it seems bitcoin fixed as these energy markets. how you've been down there use. you've had boots on the ground, so to speak. what's going on? yeah, so what's going on in el salvador is, is awesome. i think, you know, there's a lot of stories. there's a lot of opinions. i try to separate some of maybe what's going on in the politics side. cuz i don't really know enough about what happens in their own internal politics to comment. but we can look at bitcoin separately, and it's doing a lot of amazing things. first to your point mining bitcoin on volcano energy. and what's really cool about that is if you look back through history, which i love to look back through history, you can see that a wealth of a nation is usually been dependent on the natural resources that they have. of course if they can get them out of the ground like venezuela has more oil than
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saudi reba that they can't get out of the ground right now. but in el salvador they don't really have any natural resources. i mean, they have, you know coconuts but they do have a volcano and of course the volcano with the heat can produce electricity. now typically that electricity would be stranded and they would build to use it for anything. but what bitcoin doesn't, this where most people that argue against back when using too much energy don't understand is that big coin needs to have very, very, very low electricity prices. and big one is able to go directly to the energy source. and so because of that, it doesn't go to the areas that people are competing for it where it's needed, it goes to where there's excess energy. and so it can go right to the volcano in a can use the energy from the volcano to mind bitcoin. and then that bic, when could be transported to other markets, to pay for other things. now, some people might say, well, why don't they just used a volcano to give all the poor people of nick, or of el salvador power. and the reason is because you can't really transport the power that way,
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which is why it's so important for bitcoin to be mind there. and what's even a bigger story, i think for the future, we'll see how this plays out. but then imagine like all through the south pacific on the surface, i've traveled all through there. you have all these little islands that have no natural resources, but guess what? they got volcanoes to and they could also start mining bitcoin. and i think over the next, you know, decades will see the entire world geography kind of start to shift based off these natural resources that are now available to them. all right, excellent. point that, that the energy from the volcano to get it to the population, as we now with the, the transportation of energy, it's inefficient. and it ends up losing a tremendous amount of economic benefit just in the transmission. but if you're converting the energy from the volcano directly into a big coin, big coin that has an impact on the economy that is really unmatched by anything else we've ever seen. and hundreds of years, the people are using the chiva wallet down in el salvador. they got $30.00
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free when they launched, and now we see that the population is on a net basis adding to that wallet more than their spanish. so they're becoming hyper bitcoin eyes. they're becoming savers, they're becoming hard money, astute folks. and so the whole population, whether or not that, you know, i like in the liter buccheri to george washington. you know, he wasn't popular to the english back in the 1700s either. but he managed to forge a new nation. so, but kelly in el salvador and he's not popular with the i m f or the cia or the f b i. but he's forging a new nation on the concept of hard money and freedom. and we see it happening in a very compressed amount of time. mark, this all happened, you know, very quickly. i think that's shocking. it's even shocking to me. the speed at which this is happening. yeah, they've really, they've really got the population using it, which of course, a download the wall. i get $30.00 in free because i would have out of downloaded
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that too. but there's a, that's an amazing story in itself. and for those people that held on to their bitcoin. yeah, they've, they've seen it go up in value almost double since then. but there's even a bigger story that's going on and i'm like i said, i've on the server. i've traveled to all these remote locations chasing waves. i know you guys are, will travelers as well. and there's something about you need to go there and get the perspective and iced, i kind of got into this little thing on twitter earlier with someone today. and they're talking about how privileged people are thinking about this, this crypto currency. and i said, you sound privileged and they maybe have never been to a 3rd world country. so when i went down to el salvador and i've been there many times in the past surfing, but i, i didn't really understand this problem, which is that just like in most places like the united states, it costs money to have a checking account or bank account of course, if you carry a balance, typically those that those bank accounts get kind of wiped out, you know, but in el salvador they don't have a lot of money. and so they don't have the balances. and so they have to pay anywhere from $25.00 to $50.00 per month to have a bank account. and they make
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a 100 or $200.00 a month. so how can they afford to pay that? and the answer is, of course they can't. and so most of the people are a lot of people, at least where i was don't have bank accounts, which means they're not into the fine until system, the global financial system, they can't receive or send digital payments. and so how could there ever be equality if they're not able to do that's a big problem. but also the other side is the same way. so you have lots of little, you know, roadside stands as hell purposes and coconuts and the bodega is a sal, water, et cetera. but unless they have about $15.00 to $20000.00 a month of revenue, they can't get a point of sell system. a merchant account and so the merchants aren't able to get into the, to the digital ecosystem, the financial system. and neither are the people. so basically they're all out. and now to day they download a chiva wallet. they have big coin, the merchants can accept digital payments, the people have digital payments, and it's more, it's the stories more than just bitcoin, which obviously it is it about the coin. but it's that now,
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all of the people in the merchants are instantly brought into the global financial system, and that is a really big deal. right, if i have an impact on the wall street banks, reports are that jamie diamond seen in east hampton shivering and shaking, begging for big coin. and i told them a by when i was under $10.00. but j. p. morgan says that their institutional clients are dumping gold and buying bitcoin. oh my gosh. is this the end for gold bar? well, you know, i yeah. in 2008 i, i got hit really hard. i was, i was heavy in real estate in california, and that wasn't a good place to be. as i started to learn about this financial system, i did become a gold bug and, and i, i thought gold was a good solution. what i realize now is i was just a sound money advocate. it's a little bit disappointed to see what's going on with gold personally. i mean, i've basically switched over to bicker and as well. but you would think, i mean, if there was ever a time in history or gold was needed in gold was going to work. it would be right
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now. it be over this last year with, with uncertainty at all times volatility of, i mean, trillions of dollars been printed out left and right is you would think golden respond and it hasn't. and so because of that, unfortunately it's like if it doesn't work now, i don't know if it ever bill and apparently the institutional clients are seeing the exact same thing. we've even seen reports from gp morgan and from city bank both saying that they expect bitcoin to overtake gold. and so it's looking like that is probably going to happen, right. that would apply a 10 shined dollar market cap or over $500000.00 per bitcoin. what about a big coin e t f? does this matter to this trend toward hyper big quantization? well, 1st i'm not a big fan of the t f. i would prefer if it didn't happen. and the reason why is because basics, supply and demand, what we want is people buying be a coin, and that brings the supply down the demand up, and then the price will continue going up when they have an e t f. and they can start buying paper, bitcoin like the gold market, about $500.00 paper ounces to one physical ounce. it starts to mess with the gold
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price, which is maybe part of what we're seeing today. and so i think it would be better without the ctf. however, the, the, the wall street financial ization wants to have it happen. but i think at this point, i don't know if it's going to be that big of a deal because we already have e t s and other countries. so this to tional clients that were waiting for the t. f of probably found other ways to get in by now. um, but i think, you know, i think it'll have some effect. i seen reports yesterday saying there's maybe a 75 percent chance that we see one get through this year. so i think i have some effect, probably not as big as people expect are, but in the long run, i'm not super excited about it. oh boy, this is greg. gotta have you on other segment, but for now, thanks for being on kaiser report. thank you. all right, now going to do it for this edition of cause report with may max kaiser and stacy herbert want to thank our guest mark mos until next time via ah lou.
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these people learn from their own experience. how vulnerable of business is to the bank. so he pushes my business over, the age, pushes me right to the edge, bankruptcy. now i realize we will good. this is just the back that may be involved in this is the concept. see is, is the lawyers, these people have got you want other stories at a walk kind of whistle blower. tell people's marriages have broken up, lost their family homes. it is spectacularly devastating for people's lives. they have committed suicide, but left behind north. the explicitly state that it was the constant intimidation and billing by buying coffee sauce that late them to i took the spy. it's obscene. these people up nor so
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it was the most basic or could i still believe go, he did, who bought? i bought a dial tomorrow, a couple of these on your weight, but i know from politicians to athletes and movies. does the musicals does it seems every big need in the world has been left your copa ms. you can work out. this goes to school and you get the go for anything with what does not give me a glove with new sport, but he said basil makes dreams. come true that every one who falls in love with people threatening luc wide. mm.
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both police and no way say the by one hour rampage that killed 5 in kong bug appears to be a terrorist attack. adding that the suspect had converted to islam and was previously flagged over signs of radicalization. also ahead a, at least 6 people reported killed and dozens wounded in bay root of the gunman opened fire at a protest over the investigation into lost his deadly port explosion. damned if they do damned if they don't. australia police bear the brunt of public anger at government tactics to watch over anti locked down activists. the ty restrictions have driven a wedge through society that campbell, i don't know, it's very knock on your door. of course it.
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